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Pohl said that while authorities have not decided whether to seek the death penalty, he was asked to investigate whether Hasan's case had any aggravating factors
-- which are only relevant in death penalty cases. Pohl said he then asked prosecutors about it, which is why they sent a notice last month to defense attorney John Galligan outlining one aggravating factor: multiple deaths in the same incident. If convicted, Hasan could be sentenced to death only if the military jurors determine there is an aggravating factor, according to military law. Hasan is awaiting a mental evaluation, which is to be conducted sometime after the Article 32 hearing. Doctors will determine whether Hasan had a severe mental illness at the time of the shooting. If so, they will offer a clinical psychological diagnosis and determine whether it prevented Hasan from knowing his alleged actions were wrong at the time, and if he is competent to stand trial, according to military law. While Tuesday's hearing was the second for Hasan, it was the first time he'd appeared in a Fort Hood courtroom. His initial hearing
-- two weeks after the shootings -- was held in his hospital room at San Antonio's Brooke Army Medical Center. Hasan was treated at the San Antonio facility until his April transfer to the Bell County Jail, which houses military suspects for nearby Fort Hood. The military justice system does not have bail for defendants.
[Associated
Press;
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