U.S. soldier convicted of Iraq rape,
murders found hanged in prison
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[February 19, 2014]
(Reuters) — A former U.S. Army
soldier sentenced to life in prison for the 2006 rape and murder of a
14-year-old Iraqi girl and killing of her parents and sister, was found
hanged in his cell, The Los Angeles Times reported on Tuesday, citing
prison officials.
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The death on Saturday of Steven Dale Green, 28, at the United
States Penitentiary in Tucson, Arizona, was being investigated as a
suicide, the paper said. Green had been found hanging in his cell
last week, according to the Times report.
A spokesman at the federal maximum-security prison could not
immediately be reached on Tuesday afternoon to confirm the report.
Green was convicted in 2009 of the rape and murder of 14-year-old
Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi and the shooting deaths of her father,
mother and 6-year-old sister in Mahmudiya, 20 miles south of
Baghdad.
He was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole
after a federal jury in Kentucky could not decide whether he should
be executed.
During the trial, prosecutors portrayed Green as the ringleader of a
gang of five soldiers that plotted to invade the home of the family
of four to rape the girl, and later bragged about the crime.
Green, 19, at the time of the crime, was described as the triggerman
in the group of soldiers, which donned black "ninja" outfits and
raped the girl before killing her and her family. The rape and
murders took place after the soldiers drank whiskey, played cards
and plotted the attack.
Three of the four other soldiers pleaded guilty in the attack and
the fourth was convicted, all in military courts-martial. They
received sentences ranging from five to 100 years.
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Green was tried as a civilian because his arrest came after he was
discharged from the Army. He was described by prosecutors as
predisposed to killing Iraqis.
Defense attorneys acknowledged he took part in the killings, but
argued he was suffering combat stress after the death of close
colleagues and should be spared the death penalty.
It was one of several incidents involving American soldiers that
enraged Iraqis and strained U.S.-Iraq relations.
(Reporting by Dan Whitcomb; editing by Cynthia Johnston and G.
Crosse)
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