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Pretrial hearing for soldier accused of killing 16 Afghan citizens begins

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(MCT) — JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, Wash. — It was 2 a.m. March 11, and Sgt. Jason McLaughlin was roused from sleep when the lights were switched on in his quarters in Southern Afghanistan. He was startled, he testified, to find Staff Sgt. Robert Bales by his bed.

On Monday, the opening day of Bales’ pretrial hearing on charges of killing 16 Afghan citizens — most of them women and children — McLaughlin described that strange predawn visit. He said Bales told him he’d just killed “military-age males” in a nearby village, and he urged McLaughlin to smell his gun, which had been fired.

McLaughlin didn’t believe Bales had been away at a village, he testified, even after Bales left and returned a short time later to announce he was headed to a second village.

“Then he takes my hands, and says ‘take care of my kids,’ ” McLaughlin testified. Less than an hour later McLaughlin woke again for guard duty and discovered Bales had left the outpost. Bales didn’t return until shortly before 5 a.m.

The Army preliminary hearing that began Monday at Lewis-McChord laid out for the first time publicly some of the evidence against Bales. If the presiding officer finds it warranted, Bales will then have a general court-martial in which the 39-year-old Lewis-McChord soldier could face the death penalty.

Prosecutor Lt. Col. Joseph Morse, in his opening statement, said DNA evidence found on Bales’ boots, pants, underwear and gear matched the blood of one of the female victims.

Morse sought to portray Bales as “lucid and coherent” when he returned to the outpost that second time in blood-soaked pants and wearing a blue garment tied like a cape around his neck.

His return from the second village was captured by video cameras that were hanging from a surveillance balloon. The video, which was played in court, shows a caped figure making his way through trails and fields until he is apprehended by soldiers outside the outpost.

Taken into custody by two other soldiers, Bales’ first reaction, Morse said in his opening statement, was: “Are you (expletive) kidding me!” Bales then turned to one of the soldiers and asked, “Did you rat me out?” Morse told the court.

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