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The USDB

Thursday, 4 December 2008 12:28 P GMT-08

Fort Leavenworth

There are two kinds of Soldiers at the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks at Fort Leavenworth, Kan. — the ones with no rank or pay, and those with keys. Unofficially called "The Castle," Fort Leavenworth is the only maximum-security prison within the Department of Defense and has operated since 1875.

Thew are two maximum security prisons at Leavenworth, the other is the private Lansing Correctional Facility.

Of 440 male inmates at the USDB, 9 are currently on death row and 10 are serving life without parole. Female felons are locked away at the Naval Consolidated Brig in San Diego, Calif.

Though military executions have become increasingly rare, an estimated 465 soldiers have been executed since the Civil War, most for desertion in wartime and mutiny.

The prison benefits from the fact that every inmate has had some military discipline before he arrives. With the rare exception, they aren't career criminals found in civilian prisons. Sexual offenses currently account for more than half of inmate’s crimes.

It's called the special housing unit at the place known as The Castle. But for the nine soldiers on the military's Death Row at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., life is no fairy tale. Under the Uniform Code of Military Justice, the commander-in-chief must personally approve all death sentences.

The last execution was conducted April 13, 1961. Only 10 members of the military have been executed since 1951, when the Uniform Code of Military Justice, the military's modern-day legal system, was enacted.

President Eisenhower was the last president to approve a military execution. Since the last military execution, the method of death has changed twice. Army Private John Bennett, convicted of the 1955 rape and attempted murder of an 11-year-old Austrian girl, was hanged at Fort Leavenworth in 1961.

On Feb. 12, 1962, President Kennedy commuted the death sentence of Jimmy Henderson, a Navy seaman, to confinement for life.

President Bush on July 8, 2008 authorized the execution of Army Private Ronald A. Gray be who has been on Leavenworth's death row for 13 years. Former North Carolina Ronald A. Gray, 43, a former Army cook convicted of multiple rapes and murders is scheduled to be executed Dec. 10 at the federal prison complex in Terre Haute, Ind. in what would be the U.S. military's first execution in nearly 50 years.

Ronald A. Gray's crimes include:

* Raping and killing Army Pvt. Laura Lee Vickery-Clay of Fayetteville on Dec. 15, 1986. She was shot four times with a .22-caliber pistol that Gray confessed to stealing. She also suffered blunt force trauma over much of her body.

* Raping and killing Kimberly Ann Ruggles, a civilian cab driver in Fayetteville. She was bound, gagged, stabbed repeatedly and had bruises and lacerations on her face. Her body was found on the base.

* Raping, robbing and attempting to kill an Army private in her barracks at Fort Bragg on Jan. 3, 1987. The victim testified against Gray and identified him as her assailant. Gray raped her and stabbed her several times in the neck and side.

Army Secretary Pete Geren set the execution date and ordered that Gray be put to death by injection. There are eight other members of the military including — two soldiers, a Marine and one Air Force airman — all under sentence of death.

Gray was arrested in connection with four slaying's and eight rapes in the Fayetteville, N.C., area between April 1986 and January 1987, while he was stationed at Fort Bragg.

The current inmates on Fort Leavenworth's Death Row are enlisted men. Before Army Pvt. Dwight Loving of Rochester, the next scheduled to die, can be put to death, President Bush and the Supreme Court must affirm his sentence.

Also on death row are a total of 9 (as of 1/1/2008)
Names of the condemned are:

1. * Kenneth G. Parker, USMC / LCpl / 76500-92-03 A black Marine - Convicted in 1993 of premeditated murder at Camp Lajeune, N.C.

2. * Wade L. Walker, / USMC / USMC / LCpl / 76499-92-03 A black Marine -Convicted in 1993 of premeditated murder at Camp Lajeune, N.C. Convicted in the same incident as Parker. His retrial is pending.

3. * Jessie A. Quintanilla, / USMC / SGT / 76951-96-03 An Asian Marine - convicted October 1996 at Camp Pendleton, California, for murder of one officer and attempted murder of another. His retrial is pending.

4. * James T. Murphy, / USArmy / SGT / ? A black Soldier -Convicted of killing his wife and drowning their two children. His retrial is pending.

5. * Ronald A. Gray, / USArmy / SPC / 733786-88-01 A black Soldier-Convicted in April 1988 at Fort Bragg, N.C. on charges of rape, forcible sodomy and murder of two women and attempted murder of a third woman. Scheduled for December 10.

6. * Dwight J. Loving, / USArmy / PVT / 74276-88-01 A black Soldier-convicted in April 1989 at Fort Hood, Texas, on two counts of murder and one attempted murder of three taxi drivers.

7. * William J. Kreutzer, / USARMY / SGT / 76651-95-01 A white Soldier-Convicted June 1996 at Ft. Bragg, N.C.on charges of one specification of premeditated murder and 18 specifications of attempted murder, as well as one specification of violating a general order by transporting weapons on post and one specification of larceny of government property. His retrial is pending.

8. * Hasan Akbar, / US Army / SGT / ? A black Soldier -Convicted in April 2005 on charges of first degree-murder and attempted first-degree murder after attacking troops in command tents with grenades and a rifle in Kuwait in 2003. Sgt.

9. * Andrew P. Witt, / USAF / SrA / ? A white Airman - convicted in October 2005 of premeditated murder and attempted premeditated murder in the deaths of another airman and his wife and the wounding of another airman at Robbins Air Force Base, Ga.

The military of the United States executed 160 soldiers and other members of the armed forces between 1942 and 1961 (these figures do not include German prisoners of war, war criminals and saboteurs executed by military authorities between 1942 and 1951).

There have been no military executions since 1961 although the death penalty is still a possible punishment for several crimes under the Uniform Code of Military Justice.

Of these executions, 157 were carried out by the United States Army.

The United States Air Force conducted the three remaining executions, one in 1950 and two in 1954.

The U.S. Navy has not executed anyone since 1849.

It should also be noted that the United States Army had previously executed a total of 36 soldiers during the First World War, eleven of these executions taking place between 5 November 1917 and 20 June 1919 in France and 25 hangings being carried out in the continental United States over the same time period.

Of the total, 106 were executed for murder (including 21 involving rape), 53 for rape and one for desertion (Eddie Slovik).

Time is getting short for  Ronald A Gray, will some slick ACLU lawyer prevail or will he get his just due on December 10, 2008 as scheduled?

 

The Counterfeit Hero

posted Wednesday, 21 January 2004

Senator John Sidney McCain


If Your name is John McCain and your father and grandfather were famous admirals, violating the Military Code of Conduct by "aiding the enemy" translates into fodder for a political career, book deals, and adulation bordering on sainthood with the Navy never considering prosecution as an option.

Pentagon pencil pushers chose a political spin that lifted McCain, the former POW turned U.S. Senator, up to a glorified pedestal where he sprouted a halo and wings and became America's "POW-hero" with a springboard to become U.S. President.

Is John McCain a hero because he made the moral choice not to take an early release from the Hanoi Hilton prison?

No he is just a survivor following orders from the Senior Ranking Officers (SROs) in the prison camp, the same orders all the other prisoners followed. We respect John for the pain and suffering he went through as a POW.

McCain, who claims he was brutally tortured by the communist Vietnamese, ironically emerged, as early as 1986, as Hanoi's leading advocate for normalized relations with the United States.

McCain's high-profile and unrelenting support for a government that brutally tortured and murdered his fellow POWs begs the question of what drives McCain to work so hard for Hanoi and so diligently to discredit any possibility, in fact the probability, that Hanoi held back live U.S. prisoners of war after the 1973 prisoner release.

From the first days of McCain's captivity, he seriously violated the military Code of Conduct, when he promised to give the communists "military information" in exchange for special hospital care not ordinarily available to U.S. prisoners. He also made numerous antiwar radio broadcasts.

The following is McCain's own admission of collaboration in an article he wrote, printed May 14, 1973 in U.S. News and World Report

"I think it was on the fourth day [after being shot down] that two guards came in, instead of one. One of them pulled back the blanket to show the other guard my injury. I looked at my knee. It was about the size, shape and color of a football. I remembered that when I was a flying instructor a fellow had ejected from his plane and broken his thigh. He had gone into shock, the blood had pooled in his leg, and he died, which came as quite a surprise to us a man dying of a broken leg.

Then I realized that a very similar thing was happening to me.

"When I saw it, I said to the guard, `O.K., get the officer.'

"An officer came in after a few minutes. It was the man that we came to know very well as `The Bug.' He was a psychotic torturer, one of the worst fiends that we had to deal with.

I said, `O.K., I'll give you military information if you will take me to the hospital.'"
McCain claims it was only a coincidence that, about the same time he was begging to be taken to a hospital, the Vietnamese learned his father was Admiral John S. McCain, Jr., commander of all U.S. forces in Europe and soon to be commander of all U.S. forces in the Pacific, including Vietnam.


McCain was taken to Gai Lam military hospital. (U.S. government documents) "Demands for military information were accompanied by threats to terminate my medical treatment if I [McCain] did not cooperate. Eventually, I gave them my ship's name and squadron number, and confirmed that my target had been the power plant."

On Nov. 9, 1967, Hanoi press began quoting the seriously injured McCain giving specific military information.
One report dated read, "To a question of the correspondent, McCain answered: 'My assignment to the Oriskany, I told myself, was due to serious losses in pilots, which were sustained by this aircraft carrier (due to its raids on the North Vietnam territory - VNA) and which necessitated replacements.

"'From 10 to 12 pilots were transferred like me from the Forrestal to the Oriskany.
"'Before I was shot down, we had made several sorties. Altogether, I made about 23 flights over North Vietnam.'"

In that report, McCain was quoted describing the number of aircraft in his flight, information about rescue ships, and the order of which his attack was supposed to take place.

Through the Freedom of Information Act, the U.S. Veteran Dispatch acquired a declassified Department of Defense (DOD) transcript of an interview prominent French television reporter Francois Chalais had with McCain.

Chalais told of his private interview with POW McCain in a series titled Life in Hanoi, which was aired in Europe. In the series, Chalais said his meeting with McCain was "a meeting which will leave its mark on my life."

"My meeting with John Sidney McCain was certainly one of those meetings which will affect me most profoundly for the rest of my life. I had asked the North Vietnamese authorities to allow me to personally interrogate an American prisoner. They authorized me to do so.

"When night fell, they took me---without any precautions or mystery--to a hospital near the Gia Lam airport reserved for the military. (Passage omitted) The officer who receives me begins: I ask you not to ask any questions of political nature. If this man replies in a way unfavorable to us, they will not hesitate to speak of 'brainwashing' and conclude that we threatened him.

"'This John Sidney McCain is not an ordinary prisoner. His father is none other than Admiral Edmond John McCain, commander in chief of U.S. naval forces in Europe. (Passage omitted)'"

". . . Many visitors came to talk to me [John McCain]. Not all of it was for interrogation. Once a famous North Vietnamese writer-an old man with a Ho Chi Minh beard-came to my room, wanting to know all about Ernest Hemingway . . . Others came to find out about life in the United States.
"They figured because my father had such high military rank that I was of the royalty or governing circle . . . One of the men who came to see me, whose picture I recognized later, was Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap, the hero of Dienbienphu." U.S. News and World Report, May 14, 1973 article written by former POW John McCain

December 1967, Vietnamese doctors operate (early December) on McCain's Leg. Later that month, six weeks after he was shot down, McCain was taken from the hospital and delivered to Room No. 11 of "The Plantation" into the hands of two other U.S. POWs, Air Force majors George "Bud" Day and Norris Overly. They helped further nurse him along until he was eventually able to walk by himself.

More special prisoner treatment:
McCain's January 1970 meeting with the Cuban Fernando Barral, a Spanish psychiatrist "took place in an office of the Committee for Foreign Cultural Relations in Hanoi" away from the POW camp.


On August 2, 1991, the United States Senate approved a resolution introduced by Sen. Robert Smith U. S. Senator from New Hampshire providing for the creation of a Select Committee on POW/MIA Affairs to serve during the remainder of the 102nd Congress.

In October 1991, a Chairman (Sen. John Kerry), Vice-chairman (Sen. Robert Smith), and ten additional Members were appointed to the Committee. A resolution providing funding was approved. The hearings began on November 5, 1991.
The Chairman of this Committee, Senator John Kerry appointed his Legislative Assistant, Ms Francis Zwenig, as the Chief of Staff for the Committee.

During the life of the Committee Senator Kerry worked most closely with Representative Douglas "Pete" Peterson to authorize funding for the new, expanded effort to account for missing American servicemen in Vietnam. Representative "Pete" Peterson was later appointed by President Clinton as Ambassador to Vietnam.

When Col. Bui Tin, a former Senior Colonel in the North Vietnamese Army (he had actually interrogated McCain and other U.S. prisoners) testified before the Senate Select Committee on POW/MIA Affairs in 1992, McCain did not display that same "pit bull" inclination to attack as he did when the POW/MIA families and activists were testifying.

During a break in the hearing, Sen. McCain moved to where Col. Bui Tin was seated and warmly embraced him as if he were a long lost brother.

Sen. John McCain warmly greeted Vietnam Prime Minister Vo Van Kiet during a 1992 visit to Hanoi. Kiet was a ranking communist party member of the secret Central Committee of the former National Liberation Front (Viet Cong). Kiet ordered American POWs to be punished by execution and helped formulate the Vietnamese communist policy that resulted in the murder of thousands of pro - U.S. South Vietnamese in Hue during the Tet Offensive of 1968.

Communist Party henchmen executed over 5,000 men, women, and children, burying many of them alive in mass graves during the brief time North Vietnamese troops held that historic ancient Vietnamese city.


July 11, 1995 Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., gave President Bill Clinton, the valuable political cover he needed to remove the U.S. imposed trade embargo against communist Vietnam. All major U.S. veterans' organizations, the two POW/MIA family groups, and the majority of Vietnamese Americans in this country opposed Clinton's lifting of the embargo.

Senator McCain embracing Mai Van On in Hanoi, November 13, 1996. Mai Van On identified himself as one of the Vietnamese who pulled McCain from Hanoi's Truc Bach Lake, where McCain parachuted in 1967 after his bomber was shot down. McCain has said, many times, that, after pulling him from the lake, the Vietnamese brutally beat him and stabbed him with a bayonet.


Candidate McCain must explain why he refuses to ask for a war crimes investigation of the Vietnamese, his former captors.

McCain must explain why, during a May 1993 meeting with Vietnamese officials in Hanoi, he and former POW Pete Peterson (now U.S. ambassador to Vietnam) asked the Vietnamese to keep "Vietnamese files in their possession pertaining to American POWs who were released in 1973 available ONLY to Defense Intelligence Agency researchers."

Could these documents reveal POW collaboration, even POW brainwashing by Vietnamese and Soviet intelligence agents. What do Peterson and McCain want to hide from the world and the U.S, citizens?

In November 1991, when Tracy Usry, the former chief investigator of the Minority Staff of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee, testified before the Select Committee on POW/MIA Affairs, he revealed that the Soviets interrogated U.S. prisoners of war in Vietnam. Sen. McCain became outraged, interrupting Usry several times, arguing that "none of the returned U.S. prisoners of war released by Vietnam were ever interrogated by the Soviets."

Yet, former U.S. POW Laird Gutterson, who was held with McCain, told the U.S. Veteran Dispatch that McCain told him the Soviets were involved when McCain needed special medical attention as a result of his shoot down in 1967.


Former KGB Maj. Gen. Oleg Kalugin testified under oath before the 1992 Senate Select Committee on POW/MIA Affairs that the KGB interrogated U.S. POWs in Vietnam.
Gen. Kalugin stated that one of the POWs worked on by the KGB was a "high-ranking naval officer," who, according to Kalugin, agreed to work with the Soviets upon his repatriation to the United States and has frequently appeared on U.S. television.

Col. Bui Tin, a former Senior Colonel in the North Vietnamese Army, testified on the same day, but after Usry, that because of his high position in the Communist Party during the war, he had the authority to "read all documents and secret telegrams from the politburo" pertaining to American prisoners of war. He said that not only did the Soviets interrogate some American prisoners of war, but that they treated the Americans very badly.

McCain, however, does not think so highly of the POW/MIA families and activists who openly challenge the U.S. government's POW/MIA policy, many of whom walked the halls of Congress during the Vietnam War years demanding America's prisoners of war, including POW McCain, not be forgotten.
None of the Senators on the Select Committee have been as vicious in their attacks on POW/MIA family members and activists than the man behind the mask of war hero, former POW, and patriotic United States Senator . . .John McCain
While a member of the Senate Select Committee on POW/MIA Affairs (1991-1993) McCain consistently referred to POW/MIA Family Members and POW/MIA Activists as whiners and vultures and the lunatic fringe. The Committee's Final Report was issued on January 13, 1993.

McCain's Hanoi Memorial.
The Communist Vietnamese erected a bust of John McCain inside Vietnam. His defenders say that it is in tribute to the PAVN gunners that shot him down. When was the last time you visited a memorial to the American Military where there was a bust of the enemy?

Former POW McCain claims his experience as a prisoner of the communists better qualifies him to be President of the United States. He has forged that experience along with his military record deeply into his campaign like John F. Kerry. The U.S. Navy Awarded McCain Medals For Valor Without Required Eyewitnesses, Navy regulations say two eyewitnesses are required for any award of heroism and McCain has none for the valor awards he received.
However, John McCain's actual behavior from October to December 1967 is quite different from the Navy's version of events.

The following narrative is what the Navy Said McCain did from October 27, 1967 to December 8, 1967 to earn a Silver Star.
THE SECRETARY OF THE NAVY
Washington D.C. 20350

The president of the United States takes pleasure in
presenting the SILVER STAR MEDAL to

COMMANDER JOHN S. MCCAIN III

UNITED STATES NAVY

CITATION:

For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity while interned as Prisoner of War in North Vietnam from 27 October to 8 December 1967. His captors, completely ignoring international agreements, subjected him to extreme mental and physical cruelties in an attempt to obtain military information and false confessions for propaganda purposes. Through his resistance to those brutalities, he contributed significantly toward the eventual abandonment of harsh treatment by the North Vietnamese, which was attracting international attention. By his determination, courage, resourcefulness, and devotion to duty, he reflected great credit upon himself and upheld the highest traditions of Naval Service and the United States Armed Forces

.

Speaking of Fraud

John McCain made few waves until suddenly he found himself on television trying to explain himself as one of the "Keating 5," five U.S. Senators who became enmeshed in the scandal involving the collapsed Lincoln Savings and Loan and the financial machinations of now convicted cheat Charles Keating.

The U.S. taxpayers will feel for years the aftershocks of what has become known as the "S & L scandal" and will be paying off the billions that S & L clients found themselves swindled out of by Keating and others involved in the massive fraud, the fall of Lincoln Savings and Loan will cost the U.S. taxpayers at least $3.4 billion.

What do you think?