Navy SEAL charged with war crimes freed
from base confinement in San Diego
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[May 31, 2019]
By Marty Graham
SAN DIEGO (Reuters) - A Navy SEAL platoon
leader court-martialed on war crimes charges was unexpectedly ordered
released from base confinement in San Diego on Thursday, 11 days before
he is due to stand trial in a case that has attracted President Donald
Trump's attention.
The presiding judge, a Navy captain, freed Special Operations Chief
Edward Gallagher at the end of a five-hour pre-trial hearing on defense
motions stemming from his lawyers' accusations of prosecutorial
misconduct.
Gallagher's team says Navy prosecutors and their investigators illegally
snooped on the defense and reporters in a transgression that merits
dismissal of the charges or disqualification of the lead prosecutor from
the case.
The judge, Captain Aaron Rugh, adjourned the hearing for the day without
ruling on those requests.
Instead, to the apparent surprise of everyone present, the judge
declared, "As an additional remedy to the interference from the
prosecution, I order the release of Chief Gallagher."
Many in the courtroom gasped, including the defendant's wife, Andrea
Gallagher, who burst into tears.
Her husband, dressed in his Navy summer whites uniform, smiled broadly
before leaning over to hug and kiss his wife.
The couple left the Navy courthouse holding hands, surrounded by members
of the defense team.
While Gallagher declined comment on the advice of attorneys, his wife
spoke briefly with reporters, saying, "We have been utterly terrorized
by this entire farce of a case."
The proceedings at Naval Base San Diego were set to resume on Friday.
Gallagher, 39, a decorated career combat veteran who has pleaded not
guilty to all charges, had been restricted to base at the nearby Naval
Medical Center San Diego since late March.
He was transferred there from a military brig at the Marine Corps Air
Station Miramar in California at the direction of Trump, who ordered
less-restrictive confinement while Gallagher awaited trial "in honor of
his past service to our country."
POSSIBLE PARDON?
Trump has said he is considering pardons for a number of service members
accused of war crimes, and media reports have cited U.S. officials as
saying Gallagher's is one of the cases under review. (https://reut.rs/2QAJ9nx)
One of Gallagher's civilian defense attorneys, Marc Mukasey, also serves
as a personal lawyer for Trump.
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U.S. Navy SEAL Special Operations Chief Edward Gallagher, charged
with war crimes in Iraq, is shown in this undated photo provided May
24, 2019. Courtesy Andrea Gallagher/Handout via REUTERS
Jury selection is set to begin June 10 in the court-martial accusing
Gallagher of fatally stabbing a helpless, wounded Islamic State
fighter in his custody and of shooting two unarmed civilians, a
schoolgirl and an elderly man in Iraq in 2017.
If convicted of all charges, including murder, attempted murder and
obstructing justice, he could face life in prison.
Gallagher says he was wrongly accused and that fellow SEAL team
members testifying against him, several under grants of immunity,
are disgruntled subordinates who fabricated allegations to force him
from command.
His defense team has argued the case should be dismissed altogether
on grounds of alleged misconduct by the Navy prosecutor and agents
of the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS).
The defense specifically has accused Navy lawyers of conducting
illegal surveillance of defense attorneys and news media using
electronic tracking software secretly embedded in emails sent to the
defense.
In court, prosecutors have said the email "auditing tools" they used
were designed merely to detect the flow of emails without revealing
their content, and were aimed at pinpointing the source of leaks
from case files sealed by the judge.
According to testimony on Thursday, prosecutors also assembled
dossiers on four defense lawyers and a Navy Times reporter,
assigning a counter-intelligence clerk to obtain personal
information on the five from at least one military database.
The judge has said he did not ask for or order any investigation of
leaks. On Thursday, the defense withdrew its request for the judge's
recusal.
(Reporting by Marty Graham in San Diego; Writing and additional
reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Cynthia
Osterman and Clarence Fernandez)
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