An ex-soldier convicted of raping and killing an Iraqi teen and murdering her family was spared the death penalty on Thursday after jurors couldn’t agree on a punishment for the brutal crime.
Steven Dale Green, 24, will instead serve a life sentence in a case that has drawn attention to the emotional and psychological strains on soldiers serving in Iraq and Afghanistan.
In March 2006, after an afternoon of card playing, sex talk and drinking Iraqi whiskey, Private First Class Green and three other soldiers went to the home of 14-year-old Abeer Qassim al-Janabi near Mahmoudiya, about 30km south of Baghdad. Green shot and killed the teen’s mother, father and sister, then became the third soldier to rape the girl before shooting her in the face. Her body was then set on fire.
Federal jurors who convicted Green of rape and murder on May 7 told the judge they couldn’t agree on the appropriate sentence after deliberating for more than 10 hours over two days. Their choices were a death sentence or life in prison without parole. Since they could not unanimously agree on either sentence, life in prison had to be the verdict.
“It’s the better of two bad choices,” said his father, John Green, who sighed as the verdict was read.
His son will be sentenced on Sept. 4 by US District Judge Thomas Russell.
Green’s attorneys never denied his involvement in the attack, instead focusing on building a case that he didn’t deserve the death penalty. Former Marines and other soldiers with whom Green served testified that he faced an unusually stressful combat tour in Iraq in a unit that suffered heavy casualties and didn’t receive sufficient Army leadership while serving in the area labeled “Triangle of Death.”
Jurors declined to comment as they were escorted out of the courthouse. A civilian jury decided Green’s case because he was out of the Army before he was charged.
Jury verdict forms stated that several panelists said the stress Green was under from combat and other areas of his life was a mitigating factor toward him not being sentenced to death. Just as many said that the Army knowing he was having homicidal thoughts yet still returning him to the field also influenced them.
Some mitigators for several jurors also included his bad home life, not being tried in a military court like the rest of the defendants and that he was influenced by his superiors during the attack. Two of the other soldiers convicted in the attack were a higher rank than Green and testified against him.
The issue of combat stress resulting from long and traumatic deployments came to the forefront again just as Green’s trial was entering the sentencing phase in Kentucky. Thousands of kilometers away in Iraq, an Army sergeant on his third tour of duty allegedly entered a military mental health clinic on May 11 and opened fire on his comrades, killing five of them, including a doctor who helped soldiers deal with stress.
Green had been deployed for about six months when he attacked the family. During that time enemy attacks killed two command sergeants, a lieutenant and a specialist in Green’s unit over 12 days in December 2005. Jurors were also told that Green’s unit was left alone to run a traffic checkpoint for several weeks without a break.
Even more of the defense’s case focused on the lack of military leadership in the unit and the Army failing Green by not recognizing that he might 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 who listened to him about his desire to kill Iraqis, 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, Kentucky.
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