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U.S. Marine pleads guilty to urinating on Taliban corpses

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CAMP LEJEUNE, North Carolina | Wed Jan 16, 2013 4:52pm EST

CAMP LEJEUNE, North Carolina (Reuters) - A U.S. Marine pleaded guilty on Wednesday to urinating on the bodies of dead Taliban fighters and then posing for photographs, a scene captured in a widely circulated video on the Internet and denounced by world leaders.

Staff Sergeant Edward W. Deptola made the admissions during his court martial at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina, where he is assigned to the Third Battalion, Second Marine Regiment.

Deptola is among a group of Marines to face disciplinary action after the video, posted on YouTube and other websites in January 2012, showed four U.S. servicemen in camouflage combat uniforms urinating on several corpses.

One of them said, "Have a nice day, buddy," during the footage, and another Marine made a lewd joke.

"I was in a position to stop it, and I did not," Deptola said during the military hearing on Wednesday.

Military officials said the actions depicted in the video occurred during a counter-insurgency operation in the vicinity of Sandala, Musa Qala District in Helmand Province, Afghanistan, in July 2011.

U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and other military leaders denounced the Marines' behavior, and Afghan President Hamid Karzai condemned the video. Officials worried the video would stir up already strong anti-U.S. sentiment in Afghanistan after a decade of a war that had seen past cases of abuse.

As part of a pre-trial agreement, Deptola pleaded guilty to being derelict in his duties by failing to properly supervise junior Marines and wrongfully posing for unofficial photos with human casualties.

He also admitted to urinating on one of the bodies and wrongfully and indiscriminately firing a recovered enemy machine gun.

Deptola, who is married and has two children, referred to the pictures as "trophy photographs" and said he knew the Marines' actions were wrong.

The judge was expected to announce her sentence recommendation later on Wednesday.

A fellow Marine, Staff Sergeant Joseph W. Chamblin, pleaded guilty in December to urinating on a dead Taliban fighter's body and posing for photos. A military judge ordered 30 days in jail, a fine, forfeited pay and a reduction in rank.

Three other Marines pleaded guilty and were punished last August for their role in the video incident as part of a non-judicial military proceeding, according to the Marine Corps. Their names and specific punishments were not disclosed.

(Reporting by Judy Royal; Writing by Colleen Jenkins; Editing by Paul Thomasch, Andrew Hay and Greg McCcune)

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Comments (3)
bondcliff wrote:
And this followup stories just in. President creates Taliban corpses by raining down on them with drone missiles fired from safe distance. Hailed as giving the bastards just what they deserve. Just be sure to respect the pieces that are found.
Meanwhile the Marines with boots on the ground being shot at and blown up, seeing their friends killed get the honor of a Court Marshall. Wouldn’t a reprimand suffice?
Hypocrisy.

Jan 16, 2013 11:53am EST  --  Report as abuse
Butch_from_PA wrote:
Having a court martial is way out of line.

The corpses were dead. Who knows what happened before they were taken out. I am 100% sure this happens a lot, however the filming was more the big issue. Perhaps ban filming in the field by other than the press, but do not give a court martial.

Kicking out soldiers for this lowers morale so much for this in the battle testosterone thing that every fighter does in some capacity after a tough battle.

Jan 16, 2013 12:40pm EST  --  Report as abuse
americanguy wrote:
I see the political Generals of the US military have been watching too many Hollywood movies (where Americans always bury the enemy with respect and a salute – GAG!) and have no idea what it is like to fight in Afghanistan (or probably any other war).
I think the US should have a rule that all Generals must serve on the front lines in combat ( Not fight from behind a TV screen in Florida), like the troops they command.
While they may have “served” in a combat area (if you call the serving), very few of our top Generals actually fought on the front lines and if they did, it was for a very short time.
I think only NCO’s with combat experience in Afghanistan should rule on this one.

Jan 16, 2013 2:42pm EST  --  Report as abuse
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