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Pretrial hearing for soldier accused of killing 16 Afghan citizens begins

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In testimony from several soldiers Monday, Bales was portrayed as a soldier who was using illegal steroids and drinking alcohol in violation of Army regulations. He was described as sometimes quick to anger in the weeks leading up to the killings. He told others he was frustrated with what he viewed as an inadequate response to a March 5 bomb attack that cost another soldier his leg.

“He wanted to do more to find the people who were responsible,” testified Sgt. 1st Class Clayton Blackshear. He said Bales woke him the night of the 10th to talk about those concerns and also about problems in his family life.

Defense attorneys honed in on incidents that showed Bales’ conduct had changed for the worse in the weeks leading up to the killings. One soldier testified that Bales lost his temper and lunged at an Afghan who had inadvertently hit him with a box while off-loading a truck.

Bale’s unit was attached to Special Forces that operated out of the outpost in Afghanistan’s Kandahar province. Some soldiers at the outpost — both from Special Forces and Bales’ infantry unit — were involved in drug abuse and illegal alcohol use, according to Monday’s testimony.

Blackshear said he had trouble sleeping and would often have a couple of drinks before bedtime. He said he also would grind up and snort Valium.

On that Saturday evening before the civilians were killed, Bales sipped Jack Daniels and Diet Pepsi with two other soldiers — McLaughlin and Cpl. David Godwin.

They consumed the rough equivalent of two mixed drinks each, sharing the alcohol equally as they passed it around in a green glass used for protein shakes, McLaughlin testified.

They also watched a video, “Man on Fire,” Godwin said. The movie features Denzel Washington as a former CIA operative turned bodyguard who goes on a revengeful rampage.

McLaughlin testified that after the movie, he went to bed and slept until Bales woke him. Less than an hour later, he woke again to report for guard duty.

At about 3 a.m., McLaughlin said, another soldier who was going off duty reported he’d heard gunshots outside the outpost during his watch.

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